Truly impressed by the advanced technology that the Case IH AF10 brings! Seeing this machine in action on the field is such an amazing experience. Its power, high efficiency, and modern features will surely be a big step forward for agriculture. Thank you, Chad Colby, for sharing such clear and detailed information, looking forward to more videos on the latest agricultural technologies 5:39 ❤❤❤
Watching from England, really enjoyed that stream, two things apart from the AF10 that impressed was the quality of the drone flying and the excellent job the machine was doing of destroying the trash left in the field, certainly didn't look like your average corn field.
I noticed that you said it was doing double the old class 8 and it was doing 5000 plus bushels per hour capacity. Our 7150 does over 4000 bushels per hour constantly, but we harvest corn at or below 17% moisture. We do have some issues if we keep our 7150 close to 5000 bushel per hour for too long. We have never ran a flagship, but we demoed a cr and we had so much trouble trying to get to 3000 bushels per hour on the cleaning system. I was told the cr and flagship had the same cleaning system. It also looks like the shaker design on the new af combines are using the same system as our 7150. Instead of self leveling, you can pitch it any direction. So if corn is loading harder on the left side, you can shake it to the right. I really wonder if the old legacy combines with the new cleaning systems could harvest as much or more than the flagships.
We also had a 7088, but with a 12 row head. We would do 3000 bushels per hour also pretty easily. If we didn’t pay attention we would go above the clean grain capacity at close to 3500 bushels per hour, and then we had to dig things out if we went too long at that bushel per hour. I’m starting to think that maybe the flagships aren’t any better than the legacy machines.
@@drdwgmd14 50' draper headers, 16 ROW corn heads and 500+ bushel grain tanks on combines. Class 6 & 7 combines were the largest now we have class 10 & 11.
HI Chad , I noticed your name mine is Colby Chadburn Lewis but I go by Chad. I am a vegetable farmer from Prince Edward Island where potatoes are king. There are not a lot of fields over 100 acres here so I doubt this model combine will be showingup anytime soon. Are they using the same tires that Cole has on his Magnum tractor? I think they are from Titan Tire.
@@allanstriber5272 That thing cost 3/4 of a million dollars. Mostly runs 3 month out of the year for most farmers. My large Cat loader just got rebuilt with 20,000 hrs on it and ran 8 months out of the year for the 10+years. Deere can do a little better.
In 30 inch 150 bushel corn at 6.5 mph with an 8 row head i can do 2640 bushels per hour with a modded out 1992 6500 hour 1680 cant do any more tho because they hydro is weak
No it won’t because it will be sitting at the shop waiting on a sensor. 8 X9’s sold last year where I’m at and all 8 got traded and replaced with CaseIh or Claas. Deere dropped the ball with the X9. One operation said they’d never own another Deere.
Truly impressed by the advanced technology that the Case IH AF10 brings! Seeing this machine in action on the field is such an amazing experience. Its power, high efficiency, and modern features will surely be a big step forward for agriculture. Thank you, Chad Colby, for sharing such clear and detailed information, looking forward to more videos on the latest agricultural technologies 5:39 ❤❤❤
Мощь 💪💪💪 и красота 😍😍😍
Great video Chad!! Luv the LSdubs on that! Great fitment for those huge combines! 💪🏻
Hi
Thank you for sharing ❤
Watching this makes me want to move to the countryside
Watching from England, really enjoyed that stream, two things apart from the AF10 that impressed was the quality of the drone flying and the excellent job the machine was doing of destroying the trash left in the field, certainly didn't look like your average corn field.
Our friends were demoing it and I went and saw it the cab was nice
Chad great video. Can you do an update on the new Big Buds haven’t heard anything for a long time about them.
A long way from the 1440 I used to drive.
we had a 1978 1440!
Great video. These guys main shop is about 5 miles from my house
I think they make an AF11, not sure. Welker Farms demoed one if I recall.
Look at that auger! That is looong! Thanks for the video!
yes the AF11 is twin rotor, this is single rotor.
@@TheChadColby Thank you.
I noticed that you said it was doing double the old class 8 and it was doing 5000 plus bushels per hour capacity. Our 7150 does over 4000 bushels per hour constantly, but we harvest corn at or below 17% moisture. We do have some issues if we keep our 7150 close to 5000 bushel per hour for too long. We have never ran a flagship, but we demoed a cr and we had so much trouble trying to get to 3000 bushels per hour on the cleaning system. I was told the cr and flagship had the same cleaning system. It also looks like the shaker design on the new af combines are using the same system as our 7150. Instead of self leveling, you can pitch it any direction. So if corn is loading harder on the left side, you can shake it to the right. I really wonder if the old legacy combines with the new cleaning systems could harvest as much or more than the flagships.
I have 7088 with a 6 row head and can do 3000 bu and stay at 75 percent engine load
We also had a 7088, but with a 12 row head. We would do 3000 bushels per hour also pretty easily. If we didn’t pay attention we would go above the clean grain capacity at close to 3500 bushels per hour, and then we had to dig things out if we went too long at that bushel per hour. I’m starting to think that maybe the flagships aren’t any better than the legacy machines.
Are you in 15" corn? That is a completely different animal, so much material.
We are on 36 in
We usually stay around 2,500 bu per hr at 5 mph and it seems to run smooth
Flagship combines have always had 13 degrees of cleaning area slope.
30' platforms and 12 Row headers were a big deal in the late 90's early 2000's
Whats big deal now? We still run 30 footers, whats the new thing?
@@drdwgmd14 50' draper headers, 16 ROW corn heads and 500+ bushel grain tanks on combines. Class 6 & 7 combines were the largest now we have class 10 & 11.
@@MotoKeto Think bigger, 61 foot small grain heads.
Do you like the wide singles better than duals?
good
Case IH
HI Chad , I noticed your name mine is Colby Chadburn Lewis but I go by Chad. I am a vegetable farmer from Prince Edward Island where potatoes are king. There are not a lot of fields over 100 acres here so I doubt this model combine will be showingup anytime soon. Are they using the same tires that Cole has on his Magnum tractor? I think they are from Titan Tire.
Yep, Titan/Goodyear LSW tires.
The new one is the AF11
The a F9, 10 and 11 are all new!
the deere x9 will not chew threw green yellow stems at all
all you have to do is see what deere has released to know what case will have out 5-10 years later
How much was that field yielding?
290's+
😊
Hopefully lower corn and soy prices will slow down this race to make the biggest, fanciest, most advanced machinery they can dream up.
700hp and 5,000 bushel an hour? 500hp lexion plays with them numbers
Red, Newholland
"Nothing Runs Like A Deere" 🦌 👍 🇺🇸
Nothing blows up like a Deere!😂😂
Really they all break. But before you talk SHIT ! You tube full of johndeeres down brand new x9 track come off another blew motor 300 her and so on
@@allanstriber5272 That thing cost 3/4 of a million dollars. Mostly runs 3 month out of the year for most farmers. My large Cat loader just got rebuilt with 20,000 hrs on it and ran 8 months out of the year for the 10+years. Deere can do a little better.
like running to Mexico and away from the USA.
I won’t be impressed until I see one cut lodged rice.
In 30 inch 150 bushel corn at 6.5 mph with an 8 row head i can do 2640 bushels per hour with a modded out 1992 6500 hour 1680 cant do any more tho because they hydro is weak
Different animal in 15" corn, machine will be in 30" corn soon w/ 16rw head.
😊😅😊
It’s only CR 9,10,11 in red that’s it
The AF 9 and 10 are single rotor
AF9/AF10 are single rotor (3 1/2' longer than normal flag ship)
Af11 and cr11 are the only ones that are identical. Both twin rotors with the brand new transverse engine mounting.
It's nothing like a CR
Negative. This is a new animal.
Case does not excite me. Their chopper spreader systems streak every combine I've seen. Absolutely ridiculous
The x9 1100 will do circles around that combine
No it won’t because it will be sitting at the shop waiting on a sensor. 8 X9’s sold last year where I’m at and all 8 got traded and replaced with CaseIh or Claas. Deere dropped the ball with the X9. One operation said they’d never own another Deere.
How many bushels per HR was he doing
8k + easily